Munich
The Movie
By Dr. Mel Glazer
During
the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, eleven
Israeli athletes are taken hostage and
murdered by a Palestinian terrorist group
known as Black September. In retaliation,
the Israeli government recruits a group
of Mossad agents to track down and execute
those responsible for the attack. The
movie recounts their brutal acts, but
much more important, their Jewish ambivalence
toward these acts. Some general reflections
are in order.
First, Golda
Meir, former Israeli Prime Minister,
once said to
Egyptian President
Anwar Saddat just before Israeli-Egyptian
peace talks: “We can forgive you
Arabs for killing our sons. But we will
never forgive you for making us kill
yours.” That is the crux of the
movie. Five Israelis volunteer to avenge
the murder of their fellow Israelis,
but some of them quickly begin to feel
a sense of moral repugnance at having
to take the life of another human being,
even an enemy. Munich presents us with
their differing views of retribution,
allowing us to make up our own minds
while we watch their human struggles
at what they are called upon to do. You
can see them develop as moral actors
who are confronted with their consciences
before each and every murder. In a movie
review last December in the New York
Times, Manohla Dargis opines: “they
are never more human than when faced
with the killing of another person.”
Second,
the Talmud talks a lot about “an
eye for an eye,’ and there are
those who use this phrase as a justification
for all acts of revenge. In fact, the
modern State of Israel was created precisely
so that we Jews would always have a homeland
with an army, so that no one ever again
could spill the blood of Jews with impunity.
Before the Hoocaust (Shoah), Jewish blood
was cheap and could be shed by Nazis
and Arabs without their worrying about
being hunted down and punished. Now,
thank God, that is no longer true. The
enemies of the Jewish State now know
that they will be hunted down and held
accountable for each and every murderous
action or suicide bombing anywhere in
the world. Now that we have the State
of Israel, Jewish blood is no longer
cheap. But please note, the Rabbis of
the Talmud never interpreted this text
as meaning precise retributive justice,
rather they understood the punishment
for blinding someone to be a monetary
one instead. Many pages in the Talmud
explicate how exactly we estimate the
value of an eye or a leg or a limb that
is destroyed by an enemy, and what needs
to be done to rectify the damage. Interpreting
this text in a much different way, Rev.
Martin Luther King once said: “a
world which carries out literally the
doctrine of ‘an eye for an eye’ will
lead to a world with no eyes, and no
vision.” And of course he is right.
Finally,
at our Passover seder, during the recitation
of the Ten Plagues, we
dip out ten drops of wine from our cups.
We do this to echo this Rabbinic conversation
between God and the Heavenly Angels who
were singing and dancing after the Egyptians
were killed at the Red Sea: “God:
why are you rejoicing? Angels: because
the Egyptian enemies of the Israelites
have been killed, that is why we are
singinging dancing. God: But how can
you rejoice? These Egyptians too are
My creatures!” And so, we spill
out sweet wine, in memory of our enemies,
for they too are God’s creations.
We are the only people I know that marks
the death of enemies with a special ritual.
No other nation in the world is as sensitive
as we Jews are to the pain that we are
sometimes forced to inflict on those
who would try to destroy us, and to the
value of human life. I have a friend
who is extremely close with the Head
of the Israeli Air Force. The general
said to my friend last week that many
of his pilots categorically refuse to
kill innocent civilians, rather they
must have irrefutable evidence that their
bombs will fall on adult combatants or
they will stay home. Whatever your opinions
on this may be, you cannot help but be
impressed as I am by the moral vigor
with which they approach their military
service.
I cannot
help but wonder—where
are others with this same attitude and
respect for human life? Where are the
other mothers and fathers whose sons
feel the same ambiguity as our Israelis
do? How long will it take before Israel
can talk with neighbors who will share
their concerns about the fragility and
the sacredness of human life? I believe
that there must be a sense of “fear
and trembling” when we talk about
the killing of another human being, and
it is this precise feeling which comes
across loudly and clearly in Spielberg’s
movie. Go see it and decide for yourself.
It is a hard movie to watch, and well
worth it.
Dr. Mel
Glazer is a Grief Recovery Specialist
working in private practice
with grievers
all across America. You can visit his
website at http://www.yourgriefmatters.com.
Dr. Glazer has been a Rabbi, Author,
and Speaker for over thirty years,
he is recognized as a pioneer in the
art
of using our life-losses to help us
learn life-lessons.
Dr.
Mel Glazer • Your Grief Matters
1.877.532-4246 (1.877.LECHAIM)
mel@yourgriefmatters.com •
www.yourgriefmatters.com
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© Dr. Mel Glazer, 2005. All rights reserved.
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